Over the past few years our analytical NMR service has been developing a detailed chemical fingerprint analysis of alcoholic beverages by quantitative 1H NMR (qHNMR). Beyond the typical analyses of beer, wine, port, hard cider, sake and spirits, we have been looking at other fermented beverages such as kombucha, kefir, kvass, mead, ginger beer and perry. As well as the final fermented beverages we have been actively investigating the various starting materials such as malt wort, apple juice, honey, grape juice, fruit juices, and tea. The NMR analysis can provide a rapid quantitative analysis without any sample preparation based on the molar ratio of integration value of unique molecular fingerprint peaks with the integrated signal of an internal standard. In our case we typically use maleic acid as an internal standard as it’s singlet signal peak appears in a non-overlapping are of the spectrum to the chemistry we are interested in following.
The information that can be derived from the NMR experiment covers a wide dynamic range of component molecule concentrations from 10-100,000 ppm. The analysis observes all fully dissolved chemical constituents and the spectral response is linear with regard to all chemical types. As a primary analytical method the chemist can utilize the well understood literature on the NMR chemical shifts and couplings that allow first principles analysis of each molecular fingerprint to identify and quantify the presence of targeted and non-targeted molecules in the complex mixture. The analysis provides quantitative information on the following chemical components: ethanol, higher (C3,C4,C5) alcohols, methanol, glycerol, organic acids (lactic, acetic, succinic, pyruvic, pyruvic hydrate, citric, malic, tartaric, quinic), free amino acids (alanine, isoleucine, valine, tyrosine, phenylalanine), carbohydrates (sucrose, glucose, fructose, sorbitol, xylose, galacuronic acid, maltose, 1,6- and 1,4-dextrin chemistry, maltotriose, lactose), polyphenols. It can also provide information on yeast metabolism products such as 2,3-butandiol (directly from Enterobacter or from the action of saccharomyces on diacetal which is a well-known beer flavor deviation), 1,3-propandiol (from yeast action on glycerol after carbohydrates have been entirely fermented from the beverage).
In recent years kombucha has been found to contain more than 0.5% v/v ethanol which would technically lead the product to be classified as alcoholic beverages and bring the product under scrutiny and taxation by the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau which federally regulates the alcoholic beverage industry. Kombucha is a sweetened black or green tea that has been inoculated with a symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast (SCOBY) which ferments the sugars in the drink solution in bith the manufacturing process and in the sealed bottle shipped out to stores. The drink is sold under the premise that the SCOBY provides a probiotic culture to the consumer which means that in many Kombuch products the activity of the culture is not arrested by pasteurization or by addition of sorbate. Thus, the kombucha is bottled with active yeast and bacteria present in a high sugar containing tea drink. Fermentation is then thought to occur while the product sits on shelves and leads to >0.5% ABV when the drink is purchased or consumed. We have utilized 1H NMR to obtain quantitative ethanol concentrations on a number of kombucha beverages bought off the shelf at grocery stores. The samples we analyzed represent the entire dataset of kombuchas that we purchased and they represent the products of 5 different manufacturers. We also aged two of the products at room temperature for 7 months and analyzed them to observe the effect of long term aging on kombucha products.
Experimental: 1H NMR spectra were acquired on a Varian Mercury-300MVX spectrometer operating at a resonance frequency of 299.67 MHz and equipped with a Varian 5mm ATB PFG probe. The experiments are performed under quantitative conditions utilizing a 10 ms (p/3 tip angle) pulse with an 8 second acquisition time and a 7 second relaxation delay. 64 transients were acquired over a spectral window of 8 kHz at a controlled temperature of 27oC. Water suppression was achieved by pre-saturation and this can affect the quantitation of glucose in the samples under these conditions.
Sample preparation: Samples were purchased “off the shelf” at local grocery stores and were analyzed the same day that they were purchased. Samples were prepared by 1) degassing the samples by repeated vortex agitation, 2) samples are equilibrated at 27oC before pipetting to allow a mass to volume conversion to be utilized to calculate the %ABV utilizing an ethanol density value of 0.7816 kg/L, 3) pipetting 175ml of kombucha beverage into a 5mm NMR tube, 4) adding 100ml of a 100mg/ml solution of maleic acid (99.5% – Sigma Aldrich) in D2O (99.8%D), and 5) addition of 375ml of D2O (99.8%D – Cambridge Isotopes Laboratories). The final samples were thoroughly mixed using a vortex mixer.
Two of the kombucha samples were purchased in duplicate and not opened immediately but stored at room temperature for 7 months before being analyzed. These stored samples were compared with the same samples that were opened and analyzed immediately after purchase.
Calculations: Component concentrations were calculated on a mg/L basis based on a knowledge of the concentration of maleic acid internal standard present in the sample (10mg) using the following equation:
Component Concentration (C) in mg/L = 0.995 x 10 x ((IC/NC)/(IMA/NMA)) x (MC/MMA) x (1,000,000/175)
Where 10 mg is the mass of maleic acid used as the internal standard, IC = integral of the component peak, NC = number of protons represented in the component peak, IMA = integral of maleic acid internal standard, NMA = number of protons represented in the maleic acid integral (2), Mc = molecular weight of the component, MMA = molecular weight of maleic acid (116.1 amu). Other aspects of the equation are – 175ml of sample must be adjusted to 1 liter (1,000,000 ml), and the whole must be multiplied by 0.995 as the maleic acid can only be guaranteed to be 99.5% pure. The ethanol content is calculated based on a weight per volume basis (mg/L) and then a calculation is performed to convert this weight/volume concentration to a volume/volume basis using a density value of 0.7816 kg/L to convert the weight of ethanol to the volume of ethanol.
Results: Figures 1-7 show the 1H NMR spectra of the 7 kombucha samples purchased and analyzed immediately. All 7 samples were found to contain ethanol and only one of them was found to contain less than 0.5%. Figure 8 shows a stacked plot comparison of the chemistry observed in a kombucha that was aged for 7 months at room temperature compared to the sample when it was initially purchased. The alcohol content rose from 1.23 %ABV to 4.25 %ABV and it can be seen that all sugars in the original drink have been consumed by the SCOBY to produce this increased alcohol content. The acetic acid content of the aged drinks also increased but it is obvious that the conversion of ethanol to acetic acid by acetobacteria present in the SCOBY does not offset the overall production of ethanol. The component concentrations of ethanol, sugars and organic acids in each of the kombucha beverages analyzed are provided in Table I.
Table I: Concentration of Chemical Components of Kombucha Beverages
Kombucha Sample | |||||||||
Component | #1 | #1 Aged | #2 | #2 Aged | #3 | #4 | #5 | #6 | #7 |
Lactic Acid (mg/L) | 64 | 68 | 131 | 210 | 461 | 124 | 1809 | 24 | 248 |
Succinic Acid (mg/L) | 74 | 97 | 116 | 277 | 142 | 134 | 110 | 64 | 131 |
Acetic Acid (mg/L) | 3056 | 5637 | 2746 | 3333 | 387 | 2806 | 2051 | 3719 | 444 |
Malic Acid (mg/L) | 175 | 190 | 175 | 190 | 185 | 515 | 0 | 0 | 99 |
Ethanol (mg/L) | 10625 | 12640 | 9580 | 33245 | 11631 | 10938 | 8114 | 3866 | 10218 |
Ethanol (v/v) | 1.36 | 1.62 | 1.23 | 4.25 | 1.49 | 1.40 | 1.04 | 0.49 | 1.31 |
Sucrose (mg/L) | 0 | 0 | 4141 | 0 | 12261 | 11790 | 2021 | 27723 | 11386 |
Glucose (mg/L) | 24017 | 24507 | 24460 | 0 | 15379 | 15645 | 22776 | 31450 | 20328 |
Fructose (mg/L) | 31786 | 9433 | 23725 | 0 | 16634 | 18173 | 30155 | 30791 | 17437 |
Sorbate (mg/L) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Citrate (mg/L) | 0 | 0 | 1592 | 1582 | 0 | 4416 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Figure 1: Kombucha #1 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 2: Kombucha #2 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 3: Kombucha #3 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 4: Kombucha #4 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 5: Kombucha #5 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 6: Kombucha #6 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 7: Kombucha #7 – 1H NMR spectrum – component peaks utilized in calculations indicated.
Figure 8: Kombucha #2 – Comparison of original analyzed “fresh kombucha” with same purchase date bottle aged at room temperature for 7 months – 1H NMR spectrum – sugar peaks are consumed by the yeast to produce higher alcohol in the aged sample.
References:
Kombucha General Information: Kombucha 101: Benefits, Brewing, Recipes, Storage, And More – Lisa Williams – HappyHappyVegan.com -visited 4-11-19
Alcohol in Kombucha News Articles:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/09/health/kombucha-tea-alcohol-content/index.html – visited 12-13-15
http://www.wsj.com/articles/battle-brews-over-kombucha-teas-1447116607 – Visited 12-13-15
Kombucha Product Information:
Kombucha Brewers International – http://kombuchabrewers.org/ – visited 12-13-15
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A PDF Version of this Article can be found here – Kombucha NMR.pdf
Process NMR Associates quantitatively analyzes the component chemistry of craft beverages for consumers or manufacturers – for more information contact John Edwards at +1 (845) 240-1177